Archive: Finding Hidden Treasure
After graduating from college, I worked as a summer intern for a recording studio in Toronto called Euphonic Sound. They bundled in audio recording services along with some marketing, design and PR services for their artists. My main task was writing blog posts and conducting interviews for their podcast series.
The studio and website are long gone, but I’ve managed to recover some of my old content via the Wayback Machine. A lot of them had audio of the interviews, but they were mostly hosted on the website and can't be recovered.
I’ve done some light formatting and editing because frankly the typos are embarrassing, but have tried to otherwise keep these as close to the original versions as possible. Any links are probably all broken, I'm not gonna fix them.
We were all "Companero [Name]" for some reason.
Notes:
- Remember StumbleUpon? StumbleUpon was awesome. The Internet used to be betted.
- I was pleasantly surprised to see that Satellite High, noted in the “forums” section, is still active. I remember when he first made a post on the Something Awful forums about his first album release. Here’s his Bandcamp page.
- IndieFeed was a great podcast series.
- I corrected the links in this one because there's some cool stuff. This article is so old that the links were all HTTP, not HTTPs. Even the YouTube links.

Finding Hidden Treasure
May 5, 2010
Companero Jack here.
What happens when you find yourself bored, or dare I say, jaded, with having the radio as your sole method of discovering new music?
Thankfully, in this age of Facebook and LOLcats, there are plenty of ways to use the internet to track down and discover music. I’m a huge music junkie, with my already massive library growing fairly steadily. The following is a list of methods I usually use to discover music, as well as an example of something that I’ve found with each method (and yes, it’s all hip-hop because that’s what I listen to).
Stumble-esque Sites
If you’re not familiar with StumbleUpon, it’s probably in your best interest to stay away. It is a fantastic time vacuum. Emma will attest. Based on categories that you choose, it gives you websites that you may be interested in, which you ‘like’ or ‘dislike’ to provide a more refined search. You can search StumbleUpon for music content, or use sites similar sites specific to music. I was recently shown StumbleAudio, and a quick Google search provided this roundup.
Found: The following is an awesome mashup. Tom Caruana’s Wu-Tang vs. The Beatles: Enter the Magical Mystery Chambers.
Forums
As a denizen of the internet, I’m a member of a handful of forums. I’m most active in the forums at Something Awful, which cover pretty much every topic conceivable. From time to time I’ll venture into the music threads to see what people are talking about. Or, since SA has a real sense of community , there are occasionally music collaboration projects between members, or just members sharing their own music.
Found: N.A.S.A.’s The Spirit of Apollo and SA member Satellite High’s This Mic is a Pipe Bomb.
Social Media
Of course this has to be on the list. Blogs, Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, or whatever other social media you happen to frequent are filled with artists promoting their music. This is actually all that MySpace is good for anymore.
Found: Crooked I’s Hip-Hop Weekly series. Crooked I’s freestyles have a pretty legendary status, and here he released one a week for a year through MySpace.
Podcasts
I find that podcasts don’t quite get the love that they deserve. I don’t know if it’s that people don’t want to sign up for iTunes accounts to download them, or don’t want to download an MP3 from whatever website and import it to whatever media application (which I absolutely hate doing). My personal favourite is the IndieFeed series of podcasts, which has separate podcasts for Alternative Modern Rock, Indie Pop, Hip-Hop, Electronica, Dance and Blues. Each episode contains a new track from an indie artist and is updated every few days.
Found: I’ve found a ridiculous amount of music thanks to IndieFeed. I had no idea that Felt (Slug of Atmosphere and Murs) existed before IndieFeed, which is odd because they’re two of my favourite rappers.
Crews & Labels
I’m not sure how much this happens outside hip-hop. Given rap’s collaborative nature, there are a lot of songs with multiple emcees all from the same label or area, or from guys that just happen to be buddies. Take Wu-Tang for example. Not only do they have a standard cast of 9 main rappers, but also what seems like a few thousand friends that all make regular appearances. Sure, they’re not all good, but there’s always the off-chance that you’ll like someone.
Found: QN5 Music is one of my absolute favourite labels. I had initially heard of Tonedeff through a friend and grabbed his album Archetype. It featured a song with his group, Extended F@mm, which introduced me to PackFM, Substantial and Session.
Music Mapping
This is a cool one. There are a few sites like Gnod that take a few artists that you like and provide similar artists based on what other users have put in. Click the ‘Map’ link at the bottom of the suggestion for a visual representation of what you might be interested in. I’m going to include the “You May Also Like…” function from sites like Amazon or the iTunes Store in this category, because they’re both usually pretty accurate.
Found: I honestly can’t say that I’ve ever actually found anything new from Gnod. I rarely use it. However after putting in a few artists that I do like, the results were pretty accurate.
Streaming Radio
For those unfamiliar with sites like Last.fm or Jango, both are sites that create custom playlists based on what you input. Last.fm has an option to read your iTunes library and give you results based on what you already have. The more advanced features require a subscription, but just ignore it because this is the era of free everything. I used to use Pandora, which no longer works in Canada. We’re an industrious generation though, so there are ways around it.
Found: Back when it worked, I typed ‘Tonedeff’ into Pandora and it introduced me to Kev Brown.
Genius
Unique to iTunes, Genius creates a playlist from your library out of similar songs. This is obviously useless to you when you’re looking for new music. Open up the Genius Sidebar and you’re given a list of songs, albums and artists that, big surprise, you may also like. You can preview them in the sidebar, or click the links to purchase them.
Found: I swear, I’ve used this to discover new music, I just forget what.
YouTube
YouTube is underrated as a music player. Sure, the quality tends to suck and the comments are infuriatingly stupid, but just try to ignore that for a while. Open up a music video from an artist you like and checkout the sidebar. Pick a video at random and watch it. Users will create playlists of videos, which often produce something they like that you haven’t heard of. The YouTube main page will also give you recommendations based on what you’ve watched in the past, so make sure to take a look at it before you start surfing through videos of cats.
Found: I decided to watch Atmosphere music videos one day. The channel for Atmosphere’s label, Rhymesayers, had a link to the Brother Ali video below that I clicked on at random and loved.
And there you have it. Go find something cool.